The Eta Aquarid meteor shower on May 4, 2013. Debris from Halley's Comet causes two annual meteor showers -- the Eta Aquarids in the Spring and the Orionids in the Fall.

A meteor shower made up of debris from the famed Halley's Comet will peak overnight tonight, but if Mother Nature spoils your show, don't fret. You can always watch it live online.

The annual Eta Aquarid meteor shower will peak late tonight and before dawn on Tuesday (May 5 and 6), with NASA and the online Slooh community telescope offering live views of the "shooting stars" display.

You can watch the meteor shower webcasts on Space.com. Scientists at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center say up to 30 meteors per hour may be visible to observers in the Northern Hemisphere, with 60 meteors an hour possible in the Southern Hemisphere. For northern observers, the Eta Aquarids will appear to radiate out of the constellation Aquarius in the eastern sky. But a dark night sky away from city lights is vital to get the best view.

The Slooh meteor shower webcast will begin at 9 p.m. EDT. It will feature audio commentary from astronomer Bob Berman in addition to meteor shower views from North America. You can follow the Slooh webcast live directly at the Slooh website here, or via the Slooh iPad app.

"What makes this shower somewhat special is that the meteors stem from the most famous comet in all of history, Comet Halley," Berman said in a statement. "As Halley goes around the sun in its 76-year orbit, pieces of it, little chunks of ice, slough off the comet and we intersect that every year around this time, in early May."

NASA's Eta Aquarid meteor shower webcast will begin at nightfall and include live views from all-sky cameras at the agency's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. "Currently skies are predicted to be clear over Huntsville that evening," Marshall officials wrote in an advisory.

NASA meteor scientist Bill Cooke, who heads the Meteoroid Environment Office at the Marshall center, said this year's Eta Aquarids will get a boost from the lack of a bright moon.

"The moon will be waxing crescent so there will be not much interference for early morning meteor observers," Cooke told Space.com in an email. "2014-2016 appears to be at the minimum, so I would not expect the [zenith hourly rate] on the peak night to be much above 40 per hour (maximum on a "good" year is over 80 per hour). However, we can always be surprised, and the good news is that the Eta Aquarid shower has a broad maximum, with the rates above 20 for a few days before/after the peak night."

According to a NASA Marshall center advisory, the best time to see meteors will actually between midnight and sunrise, with the peak of the shower occurring between 3 a.m. and 5 a.m. your local time.

The Eta Aquarids are one of two meteor showers created by Halley's Comet debris each year. In mid-October, the Earth passes through another stream of leftovers from the comet to create the annual Orionid meteor shower.